A mobile, modular and rapidly-acting treatment system for optimizing and improving the removal of non-aqueous phase liquids (NAPLs) in groundwater

[Display omitted] •A mobile, modular and rapidly-acting system for removing NAPLs from groundwater.•Evaluation of above-ground treatment units in eliminating NAPLs.•A new decision-making tool for combining and adjusting treatments units.•High NAPLs removal efficiency (70–90%) in system with decision...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of hazardous materials 2018-10, Vol.360, p.639-650
Hauptverfasser: Sheng, Yizhi, Zhang, Xu, Zhai, Xiaobo, Zhang, Fang, Li, Guanghe, Zhang, Dayi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •A mobile, modular and rapidly-acting system for removing NAPLs from groundwater.•Evaluation of above-ground treatment units in eliminating NAPLs.•A new decision-making tool for combining and adjusting treatments units.•High NAPLs removal efficiency (70–90%) in system with decision-making tool. Non-aqueous phase liquids (NAPLs) in pumped groundwater are highly variable, challenging the selection of above-ground treatment strategies in pump-and-treat system. Adjustable systems with multiple treatment units are urgently required. In the present study, a mobile, modular and rapidly-acting treatment system was developed to treat groundwater contaminated by NAPLs at a chemical industrial site. The system integrated four units of coagulation sedimentation, air flotation, air stripping and chemical oxidation. During a 3-month onsite operation, the composition of groundwater NAPLs had huge fluctuations and different treatment units had unique advantages in eliminating some components. For instance, air stripping exhibited satisfactory removal efficiencies (>80%) for short-chain petroleum hydrocarbons and chloroalkanes, but poor performance for others comparing to other units. A decision-making tool and a central control system were further developed to combine and adjust the four units in proper orders, achieving satisfied removal efficiency (70–90%) for multi-component NAPLs, regardless of composition fluctuation. These findings raise the state-of-the-art modular and rapidly-acting groundwater treatment system to clean up NAPLs contaminated groundwater through pump-and-treat strategy, help in better understanding on the decision and management to improve the treatment performance, and provide guidelines for its implication at other sites contaminated with multi-component NAPLs or undergoing accidental contamination.
ISSN:0304-3894
1873-3336
DOI:10.1016/j.jhazmat.2018.08.044